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Posted inState Government

Window of Opportunity

Aides to Gov. Rick Perry tell us he hasn’t changed his tune on the likelihood of a special session. Perry told a reporter in Tyler that he doesn’t see any reason to call members back if they can’t reach a deal in the next few weeks, but didn’t back down from his plans to call one if there’s any way to do so. By the time that news reached the mainland, it had morphed into a story saying Perry had lowered the alert level on a special session by a couple of notches, and was maybe even leaning against it.

Posted inState Government

What Ails the Texas Democrats?

While the delegates to the state convention in Houston were busy in caucuses and buying buttons and listening to speeches, a small group of Democratic legislators, aides, consultants, and political hacks met privately with the University of Houston’s Richard Murray, who talked them through an 11-page memo on what’s wrong with the Party and what he thinks they should do about it.

Posted inState Government

Sweet Smell of Success

Texas Republicans are in a pleasant sort of mess. They control state government. Candidates who want to run for statewide office — or for office in about two-thirds of the congressional and legislative districts in Texas — have little chance of success unless they’re running as Republicans.

Posted inState Government

Cafeteria Plan

The Texas Legislature handles tax bills like a finicky relative working the line at Luby’s. First they have to look at everything. Then they have to talk about all the things they’re allergic to. Then they go on about the things they like and don’t like and repeat all the stories about the good times and bad times with food. Then they go indecisive on you. Sometimes their hungers overcome their anxieties and they fill up their tray and move out. Sometimes they don’t eat.

Posted inState Government

Storm Warnings

Let’s do this backwards, to see where things are and to see what’s been proposed in the last week on the theory that no proposals are dead while lawmakers are still working. Particularly when education and taxes are the subjects of the day.

Posted inState Government

Robin Hood: Hobbled, but Not Dead

A week into the special session on school finance, the House countered Gov. Rick Perry’s revenue proposals with a combination of state property taxes, new and higher sales taxes, a new tax on payrolls and a $1 dollar surcharge on tickets for movies, sporting events, concerts and other amusements. In return, school property taxes that now average about $1.47 would be capped at $1, and the increasingly unworkable business franchise tax would be eliminated altogether. They raised the estimate of what they think they could raise from new gambling, even as support for slot machines — video lottery terminals, if you prefer — came under fire.

Posted inState Government

Back So Soon?

Gov. Rick Perry wants the Legislature to interrupt its off year for a special session on public school finance, and he says he’ll call them back for a second session, and maybe a third, until they solve it. He doesn’t have the consensus he wanted, but the threat of a long summer grind might force a fix.

Posted inState Government

The Wages of Sin

Now that Gov. Rick Perry has finally and publicly made his proposals for school finance, we’ve got everything but the date of the dance. Perry told reporters he’s not ready to announce that, but said with some conviction that the special session will start this month. April 19 is still a contender, and we’re starting to hear talk of April 26. If he were to wait any longer, he’d risk a legislative session in the middle of a sea of educators on summer break, and the management wants to avoid that scene if they can. The implication is that Perry wants to get this thing through the Pink Building in one session, starting this month and ending before the rug rats and their seasonal handlers are free for summer.

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